China leads in global smart grid investment

Global investment in smart grids reached $14.9 billion (£8.9bn) last year – creeping up from $14.2 billion (£8.5bn) in 2012 – with China leading the market. New figures reveal the […]

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By Priyanka Shrestha

Thursday 27 February 2014

Global investment in smart grids reached $14.9 billion (£8.9bn) last year – creeping up from $14.2 billion (£8.5bn) in 2012 – with China leading the market.

New figures reveal the nation beat the US as the world’s largest smart grid market for the first time, spending $4.3 billion (£2.6bn) in 2013, with a large part of that going towards the installation of 62 million meters. The US however slowed down it spending, with a 33% fall to $3.6 billion (£2.2bn) in North America.

China now has just under 250 million smart meters installed – twice as many as those installed in the US, Bloomberg New Energy Finance (BNEF) suggests.

Europe however has been described as the smart grid’s “sleeping giant” as it has only installed 55 million smart meters although it is expected to rise sharply to 180 million by the end of the decade.

Global spending on distribution automation – the use of technology to locate and automatically fix faults and to fine-tune voltage levels on the grid – rose to $5.4 billion (£3.2bn) from $4.4 billion (£2.6bn) in 2012. It was driven by renewed interest in renewable integration and grid reliability in China, US and Europe, the report claims.

Colin McKerracher, Senior energy-smart technologies analyst at BNEF said: “Global investment in the smart grid increased relatively modestly last year after five years of rapid growth. But the fundamental drivers of the smart grid – greater grid reliability, further integration of renewable energy and improved demand-side management – are stronger than ever.

“Asian and European markets will drive growth through 2020 while in North America the focus will continue to shift from hardware to software as utilities look to squeeze additional value out of the vast amounts of grid data now available.”

A new “routemap” on how the UK can work towards developing a smart grid has been published today.